Re: How to insert the degree symbol

2007-03-11 Thread Ignacio Garcia

Darren Freeman wrote:
 Hi all,

 I looked around and didn't see this - hopefully not blatantly obvious.

 How do I insert the degree symbol? As in, 360 degrees to a circle. I
 guess there should also be minutes and seconds.

 Have fun,
 Darren



In Ubuntu GNU/Linux (Gnome Desktop) the degree symbol insert directly by
1. the binding AltGr-S-^-^ (ALtGr Shift and two ^)
2. If the Compose key is OK, with the binding Compose-o-o

Regards
Ignacio

-
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Re: How to insert the degree symbol

2007-03-11 Thread Ignacio Garcia

Darren Freeman wrote:
 Hi all,

 I looked around and didn't see this - hopefully not blatantly obvious.

 How do I insert the degree symbol? As in, 360 degrees to a circle. I
 guess there should also be minutes and seconds.

 Have fun,
 Darren



In Ubuntu GNU/Linux (Gnome Desktop) the degree symbol insert directly by
1. the binding AltGr-S-^-^ (ALtGr Shift and two ^)
2. If the Compose key is OK, with the binding Compose-o-o

Regards
Ignacio

-
Tu email con tu propio nombre por sólo 4 € + IVA / año www.dominios.ya.com 
(Código descuento: domte4)
Ya.com ADSL 24h + Llamadas Nacionales y Locales 24h + Llamadas a MÓVILES.
Desde 9,95 €/mes+IVA. http://acceso.ya.com/ADSLllamadas/3mbvoz/


Re: How to insert the degree symbol

2007-03-11 Thread Ignacio Garcia

Darren Freeman wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I looked around and didn't see this - hopefully not blatantly obvious.
>
> How do I insert the "degree" symbol? As in, 360 degrees to a circle. I
> guess there should also be minutes and seconds.
>
> Have fun,
> Darren
>
>

In Ubuntu GNU/Linux (Gnome Desktop) the degree symbol insert directly by
1. the binding AltGr-S-^-^ (ALtGr Shift and two ^)
2. If the Compose key is OK, with the binding Compose-o-o

Regards
Ignacio

-
Tu email con tu propio nombre por sólo 4 € + IVA / año www.dominios.ya.com 
(Código descuento: domte4)
Ya.com ADSL 24h + Llamadas Nacionales y Locales 24h + Llamadas a MÓVILES.
Desde 9,95 €/mes+IVA. http://acceso.ya.com/ADSLllamadas/3mbvoz/


Re: How to insert the degree symbol

2007-03-01 Thread Michael Abshoff
Darren Freeman wrote:
 Hi all,

 I looked around and didn't see this - hopefully not blatantly obvious.

 How do I insert the degree symbol? As in, 360 degrees to a circle. I
 guess there should also be minutes and seconds.

 Have fun,
 Darren



Hello Darren,

in math-mode or with ERT you can use ^\circ

Cheers,

Michael



Re: How to insert the degree symbol

2007-03-01 Thread Michael Wojcik

Darren Freeman wrote:


I looked around and didn't see this - hopefully not blatantly obvious.

How do I insert the degree symbol? As in, 360 degrees to a circle. I
guess there should also be minutes and seconds.


You don't mention what platform you're running on.  On Windows, you can 
just insert the character normally, using Character Map or Alt-0176 (on 
the numeric keypad), or any of the various utilities that let you type 
characters not on your keyboard (eg AllChars).


You can also use \textdegree in ERT for the degree sign.

For minutes my preference would be to use the straight apostrophe and 
double-quote.  The straight double-quote character is available as 
Insert | Special Character | Ordinary Quote. (cua.bind also supposedly 
makes it C-quotedbl, but that doesn't work for me with LyX 1.3.5 on 
Windows; might be fixed in a less ancient version.)


However, there's no obvious LyX mechanism to get straight apostrophe. 
In fact, I don't even know if there's a way to get it in LaTeX.  It's 
not listed in the LaTeX ISO entity reference [1].


There's also prime and Prime (aka double prime), which are ^\prime and 
{''}, respectively, in math-mode; you can also enter those in ERT as 
$^\prime$ and ${''}$.  The LaTeX ISO character reference sheet lists 
these as prime or minute and double prime or second, so I guess 
they're the official minute/second glyphs.  Not terribly lovely or 
convenient, though.


There's also variant prime, {'} in math-mode or ${'}$ in ERT, as 
an alternative to ^\prime; that's a bit more consistent.


I suppose you could put the whole expression in math-mode, and use 
^\circ (superscript circle) for the degree sign.  That's a bit tricky 
if you're not used to working in math mode.  Say for example you want 20 
degrees, 30 minutes, 40 seconds.  Enter math mode (the a+b/c button on 
the toolbar), then type 20^\circ (without the quotes).  Press 
right-arrow twice to terminate the \circ entity and get out of the 
superscript box.  Type 30\{' and press right-arrow to get past the }, 
which LyX automatically inserts for you.  Type 40\{'' and press 
right-arrow to get past the }, then space to get out of math-mode.



So, in summary, I'd say math-mode works OK, but this looks like a golden 
opportunity to practice LyX customization to make it easier to enter 
this kind of information, if you have to do it more than once or twice.



[1] http://www.bitjungle.com/isoent/

--
Michael Wojcik



Re: How to insert the degree symbol

2007-03-01 Thread Michael Abshoff
Darren Freeman wrote:
 Hi all,

 I looked around and didn't see this - hopefully not blatantly obvious.

 How do I insert the degree symbol? As in, 360 degrees to a circle. I
 guess there should also be minutes and seconds.

 Have fun,
 Darren



Hello Darren,

in math-mode or with ERT you can use ^\circ

Cheers,

Michael



Re: How to insert the degree symbol

2007-03-01 Thread Michael Wojcik

Darren Freeman wrote:


I looked around and didn't see this - hopefully not blatantly obvious.

How do I insert the degree symbol? As in, 360 degrees to a circle. I
guess there should also be minutes and seconds.


You don't mention what platform you're running on.  On Windows, you can 
just insert the character normally, using Character Map or Alt-0176 (on 
the numeric keypad), or any of the various utilities that let you type 
characters not on your keyboard (eg AllChars).


You can also use \textdegree in ERT for the degree sign.

For minutes my preference would be to use the straight apostrophe and 
double-quote.  The straight double-quote character is available as 
Insert | Special Character | Ordinary Quote. (cua.bind also supposedly 
makes it C-quotedbl, but that doesn't work for me with LyX 1.3.5 on 
Windows; might be fixed in a less ancient version.)


However, there's no obvious LyX mechanism to get straight apostrophe. 
In fact, I don't even know if there's a way to get it in LaTeX.  It's 
not listed in the LaTeX ISO entity reference [1].


There's also prime and Prime (aka double prime), which are ^\prime and 
{''}, respectively, in math-mode; you can also enter those in ERT as 
$^\prime$ and ${''}$.  The LaTeX ISO character reference sheet lists 
these as prime or minute and double prime or second, so I guess 
they're the official minute/second glyphs.  Not terribly lovely or 
convenient, though.


There's also variant prime, {'} in math-mode or ${'}$ in ERT, as 
an alternative to ^\prime; that's a bit more consistent.


I suppose you could put the whole expression in math-mode, and use 
^\circ (superscript circle) for the degree sign.  That's a bit tricky 
if you're not used to working in math mode.  Say for example you want 20 
degrees, 30 minutes, 40 seconds.  Enter math mode (the a+b/c button on 
the toolbar), then type 20^\circ (without the quotes).  Press 
right-arrow twice to terminate the \circ entity and get out of the 
superscript box.  Type 30\{' and press right-arrow to get past the }, 
which LyX automatically inserts for you.  Type 40\{'' and press 
right-arrow to get past the }, then space to get out of math-mode.



So, in summary, I'd say math-mode works OK, but this looks like a golden 
opportunity to practice LyX customization to make it easier to enter 
this kind of information, if you have to do it more than once or twice.



[1] http://www.bitjungle.com/isoent/

--
Michael Wojcik



Re: How to insert the degree symbol

2007-03-01 Thread Michael Abshoff
Darren Freeman wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I looked around and didn't see this - hopefully not blatantly obvious.
>
> How do I insert the "degree" symbol? As in, 360 degrees to a circle. I
> guess there should also be minutes and seconds.
>
> Have fun,
> Darren
>
>

Hello Darren,

in math-mode or with ERT you can use ^\circ

Cheers,

Michael



Re: How to insert the degree symbol

2007-03-01 Thread Michael Wojcik

Darren Freeman wrote:


I looked around and didn't see this - hopefully not blatantly obvious.

How do I insert the "degree" symbol? As in, 360 degrees to a circle. I
guess there should also be minutes and seconds.


You don't mention what platform you're running on.  On Windows, you can 
just insert the character normally, using Character Map or Alt-0176 (on 
the numeric keypad), or any of the various utilities that let you type 
characters not on your keyboard (eg AllChars).


You can also use \textdegree in ERT for the degree sign.

For minutes my preference would be to use the straight apostrophe and 
double-quote.  The straight double-quote character is available as 
Insert | Special Character | Ordinary Quote. (cua.bind also supposedly 
makes it C-quotedbl, but that doesn't work for me with LyX 1.3.5 on 
Windows; might be fixed in a less ancient version.)


However, there's no obvious LyX mechanism to get straight apostrophe. 
In fact, I don't even know if there's a way to get it in LaTeX.  It's 
not listed in the LaTeX ISO entity reference [1].


There's also prime and Prime (aka double prime), which are "^\prime" and 
"{''}", respectively, in math-mode; you can also enter those in ERT as 
"$^\prime$" and "${''}$".  The LaTeX ISO character reference sheet lists 
these as "prime or minute" and "double prime or second", so I guess 
they're the official minute/second glyphs.  Not terribly lovely or 
convenient, though.


There's also "variant prime", "{'}" in math-mode or "${'}$" in ERT, as 
an alternative to ^\prime; that's a bit more consistent.


I suppose you could put the whole expression in math-mode, and use 
"^\circ" (superscript circle) for the degree sign.  That's a bit tricky 
if you're not used to working in math mode.  Say for example you want 20 
degrees, 30 minutes, 40 seconds.  Enter math mode (the "a+b/c" button on 
the toolbar), then type "20^\circ" (without the quotes).  Press 
right-arrow twice to terminate the \circ entity and get out of the 
superscript box.  Type "30\{'" and press right-arrow to get past the }, 
which LyX automatically inserts for you.  Type "40\{''" and press 
right-arrow to get past the }, then space to get out of math-mode.



So, in summary, I'd say math-mode works OK, but this looks like a golden 
opportunity to practice LyX customization to make it easier to enter 
this kind of information, if you have to do it more than once or twice.



[1] http://www.bitjungle.com/isoent/

--
Michael Wojcik